Amyloid A (AA) amyloidosis is experimentally transmissible in some animal species, such as mice and chickens. While the spleen is important as the initial deposition site in the
transmission of AA amyloidosis, it is not essential for establishing the transmission, and its role is not precisely understood. In this study, to clarify why the spleen is the first site of
deposition in transmissible AA amyloidosis, we administered amyloid enhancing factor, which is AA fibrils extracted from AA amyloidosis affected mouse to local organs (liver, spleen, kidney,
stomach wall, and Peyer’s patches), to tail vein and into peritoneum; then compared the amyloid distribution. Interestingly, initial amyloid deposition was observed at the administration
site in each administered organ, not just the spleen. Furthermore, the amount of amyloid deposition in intra-organ administration groups was larger than that of the intravenous or
intraperitoneal administration groups. This study indicates that locally exposed AEF initiates
in situ
amyloid deposition, from which amyloid deposition spreads throughout
the body.
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